Treasury sanctioned cousins of Mauricio Sánchez Garza, who’s under indictment in San Antonio and is a fugitive in Mexico, and Alejeandro Sánchez Garza, who’s serving prison time for laundering drug money here, and two of their sisters-in-law. The sanctions prevent anyone from the U.S. from doing business with them and freeze their assets in this country.

Treasury also blacklisted nine Mexican real estate companies the family owns as well as a swanky Guadalajara watering hole, Lucrecia Bar.

Mauricio Sánchez, who was already on the blacklist along with his wife, father, mother and two other brothers, is accused of laundering money through San Antonio real estate developments and extorting a business partner to get the rights to a prequel to “The Passion of the Christ.”

His brother Alejandro, who has avoided sanctions, admitted last year to laundering money through the former Barbaresco restaurant on San Pedro (a Guadalajara restaurant with the same name was blacklisted by Treasury in 2013 as well) and is serving a five-year prison sentence.

In the 1980s, the U.S. seized $1.7 million from bank accounts they said were tied to family patriarch José de Jesús Sánchez Barba.